#Terrell Hopkins
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Terrell Hopkins (1987), George Dureau
#George Dureau#Terrell Hopkins#gelatin silver print#male figure#queer art#gay art#gay artists#male nude#black and white photography
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Terrell Hopkins
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#tv series#tv shows#polls#the amazing world of gumball#jacob hopkins#terrell ransom jr#dan russell#2010s series#us american series#british series#have you seen this series poll
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Okay, folks, the mini-tourney is inching closer to the finals, so I'm going to give a list of the competitors in the Miss Billboard Tourney in order to give everyone a chance to submit more propaganda. The nominees are:
Lale Andersen
Marian Anderson
Signe Toly Anderson
Julie Andrews
LaVerne Andrews
Maxene Andrews
Patty Andrews
Ann-Margret
Joan Armatrading
Dorothy Ashby
Joan Baez
Pearl Bailey
Belle Baker
Josephine Baker
LaVern Baker
Florence Ballard
Brigitte Bardot
Eileen Barton
Fontella Bass
Shirley Bassey
Maggie Bell
Lola Beltran
Ivy Benson
Gladys Bentley
Jane Birkin
Cilla Black
Ronee Blakley
Teresa Brewer
Anne Briggs
Ruth Brown
Joyce Bryant
Vashti Bunyan
Kate Bush
Montserrat Caballe
Maria Callas
Blanche Calloway
Wendy Carlos
Cathy Carr
Raffaella Carra
Diahann Carroll
Karen Carpenter
June Carter Cash
Charo
Cher
Meg Christian
Gigliola Cinquetti
Petula Clark
Merry Clayton
Patsy Cline
Rosemary Clooney
Natalie Cole
Judy Collins
Alice Coltrane
Betty Comden
Barbara Cook
Rita Coolidge
Gal Costa
Ida Cox
Karen Dalton
Marie-Louise Damien
Betty Davis
Jinx Dawson
Doris Day
Blossom Dearie
Kiki Dee
Lucienne Delyle
Sandy Denny
Jackie DeShannon
Gwen Dickey
Marlene Dietrich
Marie-France Dufour
Julie Driscoll
Yvonne Elliman
Cass Elliot
Maureen Evans
Agnetha Faeltskog
Marianne Faithfull
Mimi Farina
Max Feldman
Gracie Fields
Ella Fitzgerald
Roberta Flack
Lita Ford
Connie Francis
Aretha Franklin
France Gall
Judy Garland
Crystal Gayle
Gloria Gaynor
Bobbie Gentry
Astrud Gilberto
Donna Jean Godchaux
Lesley Gore
Eydie Gorme
Margo Guryan
Sheila Guyse
Nina Hagen
Francoise Hardy
Emmylou Harris
Debbie Harry
Annie Haslam
Billie Holiday
Mary Hopkin
Lena Horne
Helen Humes
Betty Hutton
Janis Ian
Mahalia Jackson
Wanda Jackson
Etta James
Joan Jett
Bessie Jones
Etta Jones
Gloria Jones
Grace Jones
Shirley Jones
Tamiko Jones
Janis Joplin
Barbara Keith
Carole King
Eartha Kitt
Chaka Khan
Hildegard Knef
Gladys Knight
Sonja Kristina
Patti Labelle
Cleo Laine
Nicolette Larson
Daliah Lavi
Vicky Leandros
Peggy Lee
Rita Lee
Alis Lesley
Barbara Lewis
Abbey Lincoln
Melba Liston
Julie London
Darlene Love
Lulu
Anni-Frid Lyngstad
Barbara Lynn
Loretta Lynn
Vera Lynn
Siw Malmkvist
Lata Mangeshkar
Linda McCartney
Kate McGarrigle
Christie McVie
Bette Midler
Jean Millington
June Millington
Liza Minnelli
Carmen Miranda
Joni Mitchell
Liz Mitchell
Marion Montgomery
Lee Morse
Nana Mouskouri
Anne Murray
Wenche Myhre
Holly Near
Olivia Newton-John
Stevie Nicks
Nico
Laura Nyro
Virginia O’Brien
Odetta
Yoko Ono
Shirley Owens
Patti Page
Dolly Parton
Freda Payne
Michelle Phillips
Edith Piaf
Ruth Pointer
Leontyne Price
Suzi Quatro
Gertrude Rainey
Bonnie Raitt
Carline Ray
Helen Reddy
Della Reese
Martha Reeves
June Richmond
Jeannie C. Riley
Minnie Riperton
Jean Ritchie
Chita Rivera
Clara Rockmore
Linda Ronstadt
Marianne Rosenberg
Diana Ross
Anna Russell
Melanie Safka
Buffy Sainte-Marie
Samantha Sang
Pattie Santos
Hazel Scott
Doreen Shaffer
Jackie Shane
Marlena Shaw
Sandie Shaw
Dinah Shore
Judee Sill
Carly Simon
Nina Simone
Nancy Sinatra
Siouxsie Sioux
Grace Slick
Bessie Smith
Mamie Smith
Patti Smith
Ethel Smyth
Mercedes Sosa
Ronnie Spector
Dusty Springfield
Mavis Staples
Candi Staton
Barbra Streisand
Poly Styrene
Maxine Sullivan
Donna Summer
Pat Suzuki
Norma Tanega
Tammi Terrell
Sister Rosetta Tharpe
Big Mama Thornton
Mary Travers
Moe Tucker
Tina Turner
Twiggy
Bonnie Tyler
Sylvia Tyson
Sarah Vaughan
Sylvie Vartan
Mariska Veres
Akiko Wada
Claire Waldoff
Jennifer Warnes
Dee Dee Warwick
Dionne Warwick
Dinah Washington
Ethel Waters
Elisabeth Welch
Kitty Wells
Mary Wells
Juliane Werding
Tina Weymouth
Cris Williamson
Ann Wilson
Mary Wilson
Nancy Wilson
Anna Mae Winburn
Syreeta Wright
Tammy Wynette
Nan Wynn
Those in italics have five or more pieces of usable visual, written, or audio propaganda already. If you have any visuals like photos or videos, or if you have something to say in words, submit it to this blog before round one begins on June 25th!
If you don't see a name you submitted here, it's because most or all of their career was as a child/they were too young for the cutoff, their career was almost entirely after 1979, or music was something they only dabbled in and are hardly known for. There are quite a few ladies on the list whose primary career wasn't "recording artist" or "live musician," but released several albums or were in musical theater, so they've been accepted.
#long post#miss billboard tourney#i wasn't originally going to list them all but i decided to do so because there are so many without propaganda
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vimeo
HIV and the Journey Toward Zero Part 1 from Journey Towards Zero on Vimeo.
"HIV and the Journey Toward Zero" sparks important conversations around the end of the HIV epidemic. What does “the end” mean for those who have been there from the start, those living with HIV today and those leading the way to an HIV-free future?
"HIV and the Journey Toward Zero" spotlights the perspective of some of Chicago’s most prominent activists. The film is presented in partnership with the Chicago Department of Public Health, Tessa Films and local community organizations. Join us as we hear from long-term survivors, newly diagnosed individuals, clinicians, researchers and community leaders — the voices that, together, can make HIV history.
Director: Chan C. Smith Producer: Lisa Masseur, Tessa Films Editor: Christina Stumpf Director of Photography: Ashley C. Battle Original music composed by: Joe George Shadid Line Producer: Sarah Minnie Creative Producer/Consultant: Sanford E. Gaylord Additional Camera Operator: Chan C. Smith 1st Asst. Camera/Camera Operator: Candice Majors DIT: Eric Almond Additional DIT: Emmanuel Bansa Gaffer: Kemi Mayomi Grip/Swing: Maddie C. Dodge Production Coordinator/Associate Producer: Julia Barr Payroll Manager: Holli Hopkins McGinley Production Business Manager: Mary Pat Forston Production Accountant: Lisa Bird Sound Utility: Nicholas Fanelli Key Makeup Artist: Libby Knapp Production Assistants: “Moishe” Zoe Bernardean, Joanna Bozic, Nick Canonaco, C’airra Cortez, John P. Harris, Mireillee “M” Lamort, Alex Monsalud, Luis Trevino Colorist: Craig Leffel Dialog Editor: Steve Wilke, Mix Kitchen Sound Effects Editor: Brian Leitner, Mix Kitchen Supervising Sound Editor/Re-Recording Mixer: Sam Fishkin, Mix Kitchen Archival Producer: Alexis Jaworski Research Assistants/Production Assistants: Otito Greg-Obi, Ronnie Chatterjee
Chicago Dept. of Public Health: Executive in Charge of Production: David Kern Chief Development Executive: Jorge Cestou Director of Creative Affairs: James Scalzitti Creative Executive: Riley Sorin
Stock and archival footage and images provided by: ACT UP AIDS Foundation of Chicago Associated Press The American Association for the Advancement of Sciences Tracy Baim Jeff Berry Doug Birkenhauer Lora Branch Caprice Carthans CBS Chicago Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Chicago Tribune Pat Cummings Damn Interfering Video Activist Television Terry Dudley The Estate of Mark Morrisroe (Ringier Collection) at Fotomuseum Winterthur Sanford E. Gaylord Gerber/Hart Library and Archives Getty Images Rick Guasco Lisa Howe-Ebright Tim Karr Owen Keehan David Lebe The Legacy Project Rae Lewis-Thornton Thomas McGovern, from Bearing Witness (to AIDS) The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report National AIDS Memorial National Institutes of Health U.S. Clinical Center National Library of Medicine Alice O’Malley Pond 5 Positively Aware Magazine by TPAN Public Arts Fund Alon Reninger/Contact Press Images John Ryan Victor Salvo Dean Sameshima San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library Renslow Sherer Tactical Media Files The 10% Show Evany Turk Video Data Bank Windy City Times/Outlines/BLACKlines Archives, by Tracy Baim, Mike Carter, Genypher Novak and Rex Wockner Israel Wright
Special thanks to: OTV—Open Television Alphawood Foundation Gerber/Hart Library and Archives Tracy Baim Lora Branch Sharon Zurek Dave Beedy Lori Cannon Victor Salvo Owen Keehan Anthony Hirschel Melissa Terrell Minnie Productions Eleven04 Moonwalker Cafe Chicago Film Office Illinois Film Office
Spoken word by Storie Deveraux “June 5, 1981”
Additional music provided by The Music Bed “Rest, Get Here” by Sharon Irving “All We’re Living For” by Sharon Irving
Promotion provided by Bigmouth Creative
Filmed on Location in Chicago, IL
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The Amazing World of Gumball is hilarious!
Hey guys! I’m here to do a review on the show “The Amazing World of Gumball!” I love this show because it’s funny! The show is about the life of a 12-year-old boy who is a blue cat, and he lives with his family and other creatures. With the cast of Dan Russell, Theresa Gallagher, Kerry Shale, Kyla Rae Kowalewski, Jacob Hopkins, Terrell Ransom Jr., Hugo Harold-Harrison, Logan Grove, Kwesi…
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DACC Lists Fall President's & Honors Students
Danville Area Community College has released a list of its honor students for the Fall 2022 Semester. A student must carry 12 or more credit hours and a straight A (4.0) average on a 4.0 scale to be included on the President’s List. To be included on the Honors List, a student must carry 12 or more credit hours and have a B+ (3.5) grade point average on a 4.0 scale.
Danville Area Community College Fall 2022 President’s & Honors Lists
Danville Area Community College PRESIDENT’S LIST – FALL 2022
Alvin, IL
Nicholas Garmon.
Armstrong, IL
Olivia Logue.
Bismarck, IL
Allison Bostwick, Ryan Bostwick, Dianne Trimble.
Bloomington, IL
Brennon Reed.
Catlin, IL
Jaiden Baum, Holden Dunavan, Joseph Kedas, Kylee Pate, Rebecca Rogers, Monica Vasquez.
Chicago, IL
Lauren Crawley.
Chrisman, IL
Lindsey Franz.
Covington, IN
Alyssa Cheuvront, Margo Galloway, Hailynn Herzog, Briley Peyton, Alexandra VanVickle.
Danville, IL
Noah Acree, Wariya Alhassan, Gracie Arnett, Amber Atkinson, Xitlally Bonilla, Jasmine Brown, Ne'Kedra Cain, Devontay Carpenter, Rowan Clawson, Jeremiah Cooper, Isabella Courson, Brandon Cox, Mariela Cruz, Debra Cummings, Joel Cundiff, Olivia Edgington, Robin Farr, Brenda Fisher, Nicholas Fuentes, Teagyn Goodwin, Meghan Gross, Logan Hall, Marlee Harper, Jadyn Hess, Lindsey Janssen, Tamara Jimson, Josephine Kamwela, Christopher La Combe, Trenton Lewis, Layla Martinez, Kalia Mason, Ashlynn Pinnick, Ethan Rayburn, Chelsea Reeves, Kearby Robinson, Vivianna Ruffo, Veronica Sasseen, Yoo Bin Seo, Maxeen Smart, Shania Smith, Maria Sobany Bosch, Frederick Soderstrom, Elmonia Taylor, Lewis Towne, Kayce Wagle, Charlene Walsh, Grace Ward, Donald Wills, Mia Yant.
East Lynn, IL
Abigail Walder.
Evansville, IN
Matthew Bunnell.
Fithian, IL
Codey McMahon.
Georgetown, IL
Jacob Maskel, Hunter Way.
Hillsboro, IN
Lauren Highland.
Hoopeston, IL
Charis Allen, Tori Birge, Gage Hopkins, Morgan Keith, Skyler Morgan.
Mahomet, IL
Ahmad Al-Heeti.
Marine, IL
Alixandria Grenzebach.
Milford, IL
Abigail White.
Mooresville, IN
Blake Nigg.
Muncie, IL
Dominyq Gritten.
Oakwood, IL
Madison Doan, Jarron Fleming, Natalie Garrison, Raiden Jackson, Kimberly Montgomery, Tannar Pouilliard, Carlie Reitz.
Osgood, IN
Elizabeth Pavy.
Paris, IL
Drew Pinkston.
Philo, IL
Kyleigh Weller.
Potomac, IL
Destiny Fitzsimmons, Violet McCool, Mason McMasters, Seth Pollitt.
Ridge Farm, IL
Matthew Coleman.
Rossville, IL
Heidi Goble, Morgan Miller, Abigail Ryan.
Troy, IL
Caleb Durbin.
Tuscola, IL
Alexis Koester.
Westville, IL
Laney Crawford, Jack Duensing, McKenzie Meinders, Joshua Miller, Emma Myers, Zachary Troxel.
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Danville Area Community College HONORS LIST – FALL 2022
Armstrong, IL
Justin Wilken.
Bismarck, IL
Trenton Spicer.
Catlin, IL
Naomi Dolan, Emily Fier, Lillie Hannan, Macallister Hill, Autumn Lange, Grace Niedzwiecki.
Champaign, IL
Lilian Eziefule.
Charleston, IL
Ashlynn McPeak.
Columbus, OH
Brianna Hamilton.
Covington, IN
Jacob Eells, Hannah Hunter, Calvin Springer, Katie Woodrow.
Danville, IL
Nora Abdelghani, Joan Applegate, Michele Budnovich, Anna Carrion, Christine Daniel, Benjamin Dickerson, Ian Dukes, Jayla Greer, Chelsey Haga, Dalton Hagley, Diego Hightower, Aryanna Huckstadt, Lexi Hudson, Matteo Janzen, Ginaveve Jessup, William Landis, Chayton Lawrence, Lezlea Lowe, Julieanna Morse, Amanda Nelson, Candela Nevares Garcia, Aaron Olmstead, Destiny Parker, Lilliana Perez, Tah'yah Rose, Ruth Salazar, Woodley Scholz, Andrew Sentelle, Sebastian Skinner, Braeden Skoog, Jennifer Stovall, Dylan Taylor, Rylie Terrell, Kendra Tucker, Cassie Warren, Zoe Wilson, Ella Wolfe, Jacob Xiong.
Evansville, IN
Ryan Caddell, Adam Evans.
Fairmount, IL
Aaron Dean.
Findlay, IL
Dirk Bruyn.
Fithian, IL
Reed Sperry.
Georgetown, IL
Brooke Robertson, LaVonte Taylor, Madison Wilson.
Hoopeston, IL
Maria Alvarado, Vanessa Blackburn, Ashley Cadle, Marissa Garcia, Brady Woods.
Indianaola, IL
Lacee Darr.
Ingersoll, Canada
Lucus Forbes.
Kingman, IN
Lydia Van Huysen.
Liberty Township, OH
Keiara Gregory.
Mattoon, IL
Raven Morrison.
Mentone, IN
Owen Kirchenstien.
Milford, IL
Craig VanHoveln.
New Market, IN
Samuel Endicott.
Oakwood, IL
Lane Bensyl, Gaven Clouse, Koby Fletcher, Travis Goodner, Hayley Mascari, Katherine Reffett, Charles Rieches, Isaiah Ruch, William Sandusky, Brevin Wells.
Potomac, IL
Casey Grant, Leanne Rogers.
Quincy, IL
Luke Mettemeyer.
Richland, IN
Jackson Raaf.
Ridge Farm, IL
Savannah Davis, Gentry Howard.
Rossville, IL
Madalyn Goble, Hunter Howe, Sabrina Koenig.
Sheldon, IL
Julia Bushnell.
Sidell, IL
Madison Farrell.
St. Joseph, IL
Kelsey Martlage.
Tampa, FL
Briana Hernandez.
Westville, IL
Jason Cotten, Gage Lange, Christopher Miller, McKenzie Montgerard, Douglas Reffett.
Wheaton, IL
Ian Johnson.
Williamsport, IN
Ethan Hickman.
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LA Rams 2020 Draft Class -------
IG:rams
#nfl#nfl draft#cam akers#rams#van jefferson#terrell lewis#terrell burgess#sam sloman#clay johnston#jordan fuller#brycen hopkins#tremayne anchrum#los angeles rams#2020 draft class
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Literature and Philosophy
MA IN LITERARY STUDIES
Literature and Philosophy (EN71021A): Course Outline Spring 2019
Tutor: Julia Ng
Teaching Mode: 2-hour seminar
Seminar Wednesday 9-11
St James Hatcham G02
NB: Please acquire a print copy of Walter Benjamin’s Origin of German Tragic Drama, trans. J. Osborne (Verso, 1998/2009), as we will be studying this text in its entirety. Other materials for this course will be posted to the course’s learn.gold page.
Week 1, Wednesday 16
th
January – Introduction; “intention” in Brentano and Husserl
Introductory discussion
Franz Brentano, “The Distinction between Mental and Physical Phenomena,” in Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint [1874], trans. A. C. Rancurello, D. B. Terrell and L. L. McAlister (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1995), Bk. 2, chap. 1, pp. 59-77.
Edmund Husserl, “Philosophy as a Rigorous Science," in Phenomenology and the Crisis of Philosophy, trans. Quentin Lauer (Harper & Row, 1965), section on “Naturalistic Philosophy,” pp. 79-122.
Week 2, Wednesday 23th January – Husserl
Edmund Husserl, “Philosophy as a Rigorous Science," in Phenomenology and the Crisis of Philosophy, trans. Quentin Lauer (Harper & Row, 1965), excerpt from “Historicism and Weltanschauung Philosophy,” pp. 122-129.
Edmund Husserl, Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological Philosophy, I, trans. F. Kersten (Martinus Nijhoff, 1983), §§87-90, 93-95.
Week 3, Wednesday 30th January – Benjamin
Benjamin, OGT, “Epistemo-Critical Prologue”
References
Plato, Symposium
Scheler, “On the Tragic”
Wek 4, Wednesday 6th February – Benjamin
Benjamin, OGT, “Trauerspiel and Tragedy,“ I
References
Schmitt, Political Theology
Gryphius, Leo Armenius
Calderon, Life is a Dream
Week 5, Wednesday 13th February – Benjamin
Benjamin, OGT, “Trauerspiel and Tragedy,“ II
References
Nietzsche, The Birth of Tragedy
Lukács, Soul and Forms
Rosenzweig, The Star of Redemption
Scheler, “On the Tragic”
Benjamin, “Fate and Character”; “Toward the Critique of Violence”
Week 6, Wednesday 20th February
Tutorial Week – No seminar
Week 7, Wednesday 27th February – Benjamin
Benjamin, OGT, “Trauerspiel and Tragedy,“ III; „Allegory and Trauerspiel,“ I
References
Shakespeare, Hamlet
Panofsky and Saxl on Dürer’s Melancholia I
Giehlow on Melancholia I; The Humanist Interpretation of Hieroglyphs
Warburg
Freud, “Mourning and Melancholia”
Week 8, Wednesday 6th March – Benjamin
Benjamin, OGT, “Allegory and Trauerspiel,“ II and III
References
Benjamin, “On Language as Such and on the Language of Man”; “The Role of Language in Trauerspiel and Tragedy”; “Trauerspiel and Tragedy”
Gryphius, Leo Armenius
Week 9, Wednesday 13th March – Adorno
Adorno, “The Actuality of Philosophy” (May 2, 1931), in Telos 31 (1977), 120-133.
Adorno, “The Idea of Natural History” (1932), in Telos 60 (1984), 111-124.
Week 10, Wednesday 20th March – Adorno
Adorno, “III.2 World Spirit and Natural History,” in Negative Dialectics, trans. E.B. Ashton, Continuum, 1973, pp. 300-360.
Week 11, Wednesday 27th March – Conclusion
General discussion
Preparatory Reading
Gryphius, Leo Armenius
Calderon, Life Is A Dream
Shakespeare, Hamlet
Hofmannsthal, The Tower
Further Reading
Benjamin
On Language as Such and on the Language of Man (1916)
The Role of Language in Trauerspiel and Tragedy (1916)
Trauerspiel and Tragedy (1916)
Fate and Character (1919)
Toward the Critique of Violence (1921)
Calderon's El mayor monstrue, los celos and Hebbel's Herodus and Mariamne (1923)
General
Adorno, Theodor. "Portrait of Walter Benjamin," in: Prisms. Trans. Samuel and Shierry Weber. MIT Press, 1981.
Adorno, Theodor. Against Epistemology: A Metacritique. Trans. Willis Domingo. Oxford: Blackwell, 1982.
Adorno, Theodor, and Walter Benjamin. The Complete Correspondence, 1928-1940. Ed. Henri Lonitz. Trans. Nicholas Walker. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1999.
Agamben, Giorgio. Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life, Stanford UP, 1998.
Cascardi, Anthony J. "Comedia and Trauerspiel: On Benjamin and Calderón." Comparative Drama 16:1 (1982), 1-11.
Cobb-Stevens, Richard. “Husserl on Eidetic Intuition and Historical Interpretation,” American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 66 (1992): 261–75.
Comay, Rebecca. "Mourning Work and Play," in Research in Phenomenology 23 (1993), pp. 105-130.
Drummond, John. “Husserl on the Ways to the Performance of the Reduction,” Man and World 8 (1975): 47–69.
Drummond, John. “The Structure of Intentionality,” in The New Husserl, ed. D. Welton (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2003), 65–92.
Derrida, Jacques. "Force of Law."
Fenves, Peter. "Marx, Mourning, Messianity," in: Hent de Vries/Samuel Weber (Hg.): Violence, Identity and Self-Determination, Stanford, 1997, 253–270.
Fenves, Peter. "Tragedy and Prophecy in Benjamin’s 'Origin of the German Mourning Play,'" in: Arresting Language. From Leibniz to Benjamin, Stanford UP, 2001, 227–248.
Foster, Roger. Adorno: The Recovery of Experience. SUNY Press, 2007.
Freud, Sigmund. "Mourning and Melancholia," The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, XIV. The Hogarth Press, 1957, pp. 237-258.
Friedlander, Eli. "On the Musical Gathering of Echoes of the Voice: Walter Benjamin on Opera and the Trauerspiel." The Opera Quarterly, vol. 21 no. 4 (2005), pp. 631-646.
Geulen, Eva. The End of Art : Readings in a Rumor after Hegel. Stanford University Press, 2006.
Giehlow, Karl, and Robin Raybould. The Humanist Interpretation of Hieroglyphs in the Allegorical Studies of the Renaissance with a Focus on the Triumphal Arch of Maximilian I. Brill, 2015.
Hamacher, Werner. "Guilt History."
Hanssen, Beatrice. Walter Benjamin's Other History : of Stones, Animals, Human Beings, and Angels. University of California Press, 1998.
Hanssen, Beatrice. "Philosophy at Its Origin: Walter Benjamin’s Prologue to the 'Ursprung des deutschen Trauerspiels,'" in: Modern Language Notes 110 (1995), 809–833.
Haverkampf, Hans-Erhard. Benjamin in Frankfurt : Die Zentralen Jahre 1922-1932. Societäts-Verlag, 2016.
Helmling, Steven. "Constellation and Critique: Adorno's Constellation, Benjamin's Dialectical Image." Postmodern Culture 14:1 (2003).
Johnson, Barbara, The Wake of Deconstruction, Cambridge, Mass, 1994.
Johnson, Christopher D. “Configuring the Baroque: Warburg and Benjamin.” Culture, Theory and Critique, vol. 57, no. 2, 2016, pp. 142��165.
Kantorowicz, Ernst H. The King's Two Bodies : a Study in Mediaeval Political Theology. Princeton University Press, 1997.
Klibansky, Raymond; Panofsky, Erwin; Saxl, Fritz. Saturn and Melancholy : Studies in the History of Natural Philosophy, Religion, and Art. Basic Books, 1964.
Lacan, Jacques. "Desire and the Interpretation of Desire in Hamlet," in: Shoshana Felman (ed.): Literature and Psychoanalysis. The Question of Reading: Otherwise, Baltimore, 1982, 11–52.
Lindner, Burkhardt. "Habilitationsakte Benjamin. Über ein 'akademisches Trauerspiel' und über ein Vorkapitel der "Frankfurter Schule" (Horkheimer, Adorno)/"Walter Benjamins's attempt of a Habilitation. On an 'academic Trauerspiel' and on other preliminaries of the "Frankfurter Schule" (Horkheimer, Adorno)." In: Zeitschrift für Literaturwissenschaft und Linguistik 14.53 (1984): 147-166.
Lukács, György. Soul and Form. MIT Press, 1978.
Lukács, György. Theory of the Novel.
Marin, Louis. Food for Thought. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997.
McFarland, James. “Presentation.” Constellation: Friedrich Nietzsche and Walter Benjamin in the Now-Time of History. Fordham University Press, 2012, pp. 67-102 (Chapter 2).
McLaughlin, Kevin. "Benjamin's Barbarism." The Germanic Review: Literture, Culture, Theory, 81:1 (2006), 4-20.
Menke, Christoph, and James. Phillips. Tragic Play : Irony and Theater from Sophocles to Beckett. Columbia University Press, 2009.
Merback, Mitchell B. Perfection's Therapy : an Essay on Albrecht Dürer's Melencolia I. Zone Books, 2017.
Miller, J. Hillis. »The Two Allegories«, in: Morton Bloomfield (ed.): Allegory, Myth and Symbol, Cambridge, 1981, 355–370.
Mininger, J. D., and Jason Michael Peck. German Aesthetics : Fundamental Concepts from Baumgarten to Adorno. Bloomsbury, Bloomsbury Academic, 2016.
Nägele, Rainer. Theater, Theory, and Speculation: Walter Benjamin and the Scenes of Modernity, Baltimore, 1991.
Newman, Jane O. Benjamin's Library: modernity, nation, and the Baroque. Cornell UP, 2011.
Newman, Jane O. "Tragedy and 'Trauerspiel' for the (Post-)Westphalian Age." In: Renaissance Drama 40 (2012), pp. 197-208.
Newman, Jane. “Enchantment in Times of War: Aby Warburg, Walter Benjamin, and the Secularization Thesis.” Representations, vol. 105, no. 105, 2009, pp. 133-0_4.
Nietzsche, The Birth of Tragedy
Pensky, Max. Melancholy Dialectics: Walter Benjamin and the Play of Mourning. U Mass Press, 1993.
Plato, Symposium.
Rosenzweig, Franz, and Barbara Ellen Galli. The Star of Redemption. University of Wisconsin Press, 2005.
Scheler, Max. "On the Tragic." CrossCurrents 4.2 (1954), 178-191.
Schmitt, Carl, et al. Hamlet or Hecuba : the Intrusion of the Time into the Play. Telos Press, 2009.
Schmitt, Carl. Political Theology : Four Chapters on the Concept of Sovereignty. University of Chicago Press, 2005.
Szondi, Peter. An Essay on the Tragic. Stanford University Press, 2002.
Weber, Samuel. Benjamin's -Abilities. Harvard University Press, 2008.
Willard, Dallas. “The Paradox of Logical Psychologism: Husserl’s Way Out,” American Philosophical Quarterly 9 (1972): 94–100.
Woodfield, Richard (ed.) Art history as cultural history: Warburg's projects. G+B Arts International, 2000.
Learning Outcomes
- You will have a grasp of the place of literature in the modern Continental philosophy tradition.
- You will have a good understanding of how this tradition challenges and transforms Classical philosophical conceptions of literature.
- You will be able to expound and analyse the textual and conceptual styles of the three key thinkers on the course.
- You will have a sound grasp of the literature of and on both the broad relationship between literature and philosophy, and the three specific thinkers addressed on the module.
- You will be able to use the ideas and texts explored in the module to inform your readings in literary and cultural texts.
Assessment Criteria
- Students should show a clear command of traditional conceptions of the literary in the history of philosophy, and of how the modern Continental tradition challenges these.
- Students should show a detailed critical knowledge of at least one of the module’s key thinkers’ ideas.
- Students should show a knowledge and capacity to use a good range of secondary literature on both general issues in the field and on the specific thinkers and texts they address.
- Students should be able to read the relevant texts from both literary critical and conceptual perspectives.
- Students should show an awareness of the relevance of the issues and texts studied on the course to contemporary debates in literary theory.
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20 AEW Dark and Elevation Regulars that AEW should sign
Now I know, AEW has a very stacked roster, in fact I've considered writing an essay on the risk of AEW's growing roster being top-heavy
I mean we've barely scraped the potential of Brian Cage, Scorpio Sky, Wardlow, Sammy Guevara, TH2, Sonny Kiss, Matt Sydal, Proud and Powerful, Nick Comoroto, Will Hobbs, Serena Deeb (who I know is injured atm), and many more. But with Rampage oncoming maybe there is room for them.
But, we'll stick a pin in that for now, because tonight is AEW's 100th Episode of Dark. A big deal still considering it's one of AEW's 2 weekly youtube wrestling shows, and one of AEW's many Youtube weekly shows if you include vlogs such as BTE, SammysVlogs, Ethan Page's vlog and the AEW-promotional Countdown to and Outside the Ring with Lexy Nair segments and the Unrestricted Podcast. In the pandemic era, Dark became a home to several indie talents in need for work, some got signed but not all, so I'm gonna list 10 men's and 10 women's wrestlers who were regulars on Dark and Elevation who AEW can and should still sign
Note: I will not be including wrestlers who look set for regularity, so Wheeler Yuta, Jora Johl, Fuego and the Wingmen won't be on the list, as will any AEW Women's tournament entrants (Maki Itoh, Madi Wrenkowski, Nicole Savoy etc.). Danny Limelight and Konosuke Takeshita are also signed to MLW and DDT Pro just fyi
10 Men AEW should sign
The men's division is already stacked, and it has a lot of up and comers too, but there are still a few areas where AEW's Dark stalwarts have proven they can fill a void for.
Honorable mentions for: JDX, El Australiano, M'Badu, Jake St. Patrick, Brick Aldridge, Megabyte Ronnie, Suge 'Pineapple Pete' D and Vary Morales. Also Kidd Bandit, but he hasn't wrestled on Dark or Elevation so I couldn't add him in.
10. Marty Casaus Better known as Marty 'the Moth' Martinez from Lucha Underground, Marty trained with AEW after some time out with injury and made some appearances on Dark. As the Moth, Marty demonstrated his character work as a gross heel, but his size was also an asset to his disturbed and near-psychotic persona.
9. Dean Alexander An alumnus of the Nightmare Factory, Alexander has frequented on Dark and Elevation usually in tag action where he hasn't been able to get his dickhead persona across. He is your traditional cocky heel which in the Nightmare Factory showcases has led to his hilarious downfalls, even losing to Negative One in his multiple failures to win in the Main Event of these showcases. Frankly, this is what Baron Corbin should be like if you're gonna mock him, he's also very impressive in the ring.
8. Dillon McQueen Another Nightmare Factory alum, Dillon McQueen has also only been used for jobbing, but his character is actually great. The King of Queens, Dillon brims charisma that would be a winner for crowds, but he has a babyface fire to him as well, easily could be a rising talent with the right training.
7. Dan Barry To be honest, I like his Hawaiian Shirts. He has a lot of experience in the indies and can work in a similar way Colt Cabana works balancing serious and comedy wrestling, would just be pretty cool to see him more.
6. & 5. TNT (Terrence and Terrell Hughes) Sons of D-Von Dudley, TNT have had less appearances on AEW as of recent, which is a shame, because they can definitely be developed as some of the next gen tag teams the Acclaimed and Blonds have been. AEW haven't shied from legacy wrestlers in the past, and the duo definitely have potential.
4. Chandler Hopkins Chandler Hopkins has shown up to be squashed by the big men a lot, but somehow he also manages to eke out some strong entertainment and fluid wrestling in it. His match against Brian Cage is an effective example of this. Like Fuego, Chandler is definitely someone you can use on the undercard for some enhancement, maybe even push up once more character comes across.
3. Ryzin Ryzin has stuck with AEW for quite a while now, even having skits on BTE. The Unholy Father however never got a W on AEW, which is a shame because he has character and promo skills in hand. He could easily be a fit for Chaos Project as well or teamed with Abandon in a James Mitchell kinda role.
2. Carlie Bravo One of the first class alums of the Nightmare Factory, Carlie Bravo remains charismatic and athletic in his showings, he even had a great little pairing with Shawn Dean until Dean's signing, I'd love to see them bring that back - two Navy veterans tearing up the tag scene would be pretty awesome.
1. Baron Black Few have stayed the course during the pandemic era like Baron Black. Debuting in April and still yet to get his first win, he was one of the three touted stars by Cody on Sammy's vlog who he encouraged to be booked around the world because of his workrate and skill. If anyone has earned it that isn't named Fuego del Sol (or that other name Cody mentioned), it's Baron Black.
10 Women AEW should sign In contrast to the men's division, AEW's women's roster does look like it could use some buffing, for midcard and even building more stars.
Honorable mentions are plenty in this one, so just missing out are the following: Ashley D'Amboise, Leila Grey, Renee Michelle, Jazmin Allure, Savannah Evans, Willow Nightingale, the Renegade Twins, Holidead, Kenzie Paige, Jennacide and Brooke Havok (who I would guess will be signed once her leg recovers).
10. Ashley Vox With or without her Sea Stars tag partner, Delmi Exo, Ashley Vox has proven herself a frequent flier for AEW. Talented in singles and tag competition. She also has a strong rapport with many of AEW's current roster.
9. Alex Gracia The Pink Dream has been on ROH as of recent but remains a freelancer, her last appearance being a squash from Dr. Britt Baker DMD. AEW must've been high on Gracia at one point because they gave her a title shot on Dynamite. With experience in Shimmer and Stardom, Gracia would definitely be a worthy addition.
8. Tesha Price Another woman who AEW put on Dynamite rare times, Tesha proved herself to play face and heel during her time on Dark and Elevation. As a heel she showed a lot of fire especially against KiLynn King and Ryo Mizunami, the Psycho Sweetheart definitely has something she can give to the division - who are tbf lacking in heels right now.
7. Vertvixen I am not sure what it is about Vertvixen specifically, but whenever I see her I think she has the look, not to mention the athleticism to boot. Her triple threat on MPW against Jennacide and Jazmin Allure was a definite highlight as of recent.
6. Miranda Alize A former Mae Young Classic competitor, like Jennacide and Gracia she's recently been used by ROH, but she is definitely a confident wrestler and does not shy from the intergender matches either, having fought Laredo Kid and Danny Limelight. She's worked with many impressive wrestlers too, including an Impact Knockouts Title match against Jordynne Grace and matches against Deonna, Taya and Tessa.
5. Reka Tehaka The Samoan Savage may've debuted on AEW's first ever house show, but regular Dark and Elevation appearances have been met with positive reactions. Being partly trained by the Nightmare Factory, Tehaka has done well to establish herself despite only wrestling for a year and a half, she could definitely be a prospect.
4. Veda Scott Okay, so I cheated a little by saying no competitors, but I could not leave out Veda on this list. She has in-ring talent and intergender experience - tagging with her Speedball husband - but on AEW Dark and the Deadly Draw she proved herself excellent on commentary. A female voice in the booth even for just the women's matches would go a long way for the division and Veda's the perfect voice for it.
3. Dani Jordyn The Mean Girl is definitely someone you can call a regular on Dark and Elevation. She works hard and works with a lot of main roster talent, and I don't think I've seen her put on a bad match. So it would be nice to reward her with a contract.
2. Diamante It still baffles me actually that Diamante has yet to become All Elite. Deadly Draw winner and involved in a lot of the Elevation/Dark women's feuds, Diamante has a wealth of knowledge and experience under her belt. She's still popular with fans and can easily step back into her LAX days by pairing with the Inner Circle. Few unsigned talent have won as much as her too, I would say it's when rather than if, but when is taking a long ass time.
1. KiLynn King The three names Cody praised highly were Fuego, Baron Black and KiLynn King, so I think above all else they should be given contracts. In fact, I was surprised King wasn't on the Dark 100 card, by virtue that although King has shown up on Dynamite a few times, she has been on Dark and Elevation 41 times since debuting in May 2020, it was a shock that someone so regular wasn't on the card. King showed she could work as the bully heel but also as a charismatic babyface, even having a little faction brewing with Swole and Red Velvet as RSK, but when crowds came back we seemed to drop the potential of AEW's first all-women faction. King is over with fans...so long as you don't put her against someone as over as Thunder Rosa, and she has put on some lowkey bangers during her time on AEW, especially the one against Riho. Tall and powerful, but fun in the ring and outside the ring with clips of her in the crowd chanting and even vibing to Angelico's music. King would definitely be on the top of my list of AEW Dark regulars that deserve a contract.
I'm sure I might've missed some and opinions may differ, but I think these lot would definitely be able to fit into AEW effortlessly thanks to their time on Dark and Elevation. Many of whom could be used to build or become future champions themselves, and I hope still to see more of them beyond Dark 100.
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George Dureau, Terrell Hopkins, 1987
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HIV and the Journey Toward Zero Part 1 from Journey Towards Zero on Vimeo.
"HIV and the Journey Toward Zero" sparks important conversations around the end of the HIV epidemic. What does “the end” mean for those who have been there from the start, those living with HIV today and those leading the way to an HIV-free future?
"HIV and the Journey Toward Zero" spotlights the perspective of some of Chicago’s most prominent activists. The film is presented in partnership with the Chicago Department of Public Health, Tessa Films and local community organizations. Join us as we hear from long-term survivors, newly diagnosed individuals, clinicians, researchers and community leaders — the voices that, together, can make HIV history.
Director: Chan C. Smith Producer: Lisa Masseur, Tessa Films Editor: Christina Stumpf Director of Photography: Ashley C. Battle Original music composed by: Joe George Shadid Line Producer: Sarah Minnie Creative Producer/Consultant: Sanford E. Gaylord Additional Camera Operator: Chan C. Smith 1st Asst. Camera/Camera Operator: Candice Majors DIT: Eric Almond Additional DIT: Emmanuel Bansa Gaffer: Kemi Mayomi Grip/Swing: Maddie C. Dodge Production Coordinator/Associate Producer: Julia Barr Payroll Manager: Holli Hopkins McGinley Production Business Manager: Mary Pat Forston Production Accountant: Lisa Bird Sound Utility: Nicholas Fanelli Key Makeup Artist: Libby Knapp Production Assistants: “Moishe” Zoe Bernardean, Joanna Bozic, Nick Canonaco, C’airra Cortez, John P. Harris, Mireillee “M” Lamort, Alex Monsalud, Luis Trevino Colorist: Craig Leffel Dialog Editor: Steve Wilke, Mix Kitchen Sound Effects Editor: Brian Leitner, Mix Kitchen Supervising Sound Editor/Re-Recording Mixer: Sam Fishkin, Mix Kitchen Archival Producer: Alexis Jaworski Research Assistants/Production Assistants: Otito Greg-Obi, Ronnie Chatterjee
Chicago Dept. of Public Health: Executive in Charge of Production: David Kern Chief Development Executive: Jorge Cestou Director of Creative Affairs: James Scalzitti Creative Executive: Riley Sorin
Stock and archival footage and images provided by: ACT UP AIDS Foundation of Chicago Associated Press The American Association for the Advancement of Sciences Tracy Baim Jeff Berry Doug Birkenhauer Lora Branch Caprice Carthans CBS Chicago Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Chicago Tribune Pat Cummings Damn Interfering Video Activist Television Terry Dudley The Estate of Mark Morrisroe (Ringier Collection) at Fotomuseum Winterthur Sanford E. Gaylord Gerber/Hart Library and Archives Getty Images Rick Guasco Lisa Howe-Ebright Tim Karr Owen Keehan David Lebe The Legacy Project Rae Lewis-Thornton Thomas McGovern, from Bearing Witness (to AIDS) The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report National AIDS Memorial National Institutes of Health U.S. Clinical Center National Library of Medicine Alice O’Malley Pond 5 Positively Aware Magazine by TPAN Public Arts Fund Alon Reninger/Contact Press Images John Ryan Victor Salvo Dean Sameshima San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library Renslow Sherer Tactical Media Files The 10% Show Evany Turk Video Data Bank Windy City Times/Outlines/BLACKlines Archives, by Tracy Baim, Mike Carter, Genypher Novak and Rex Wockner Israel Wright
Special thanks to: OTV—Open Television Alphawood Foundation Gerber/Hart Library and Archives Tracy Baim Lora Branch Sharon Zurek Dave Beedy Lori Cannon Victor Salvo Owen Keehan Anthony Hirschel Melissa Terrell Minnie Productions Eleven04 Moonwalker Cafe Chicago Film Office Illinois Film Office
Spoken word by Storie Deveraux “June 5, 1981”
Additional music provided by The Music Bed “Rest, Get Here” by Sharon Irving “All We’re Living For” by Sharon Irving
Promotion provided by Bigmouth Creative
Filmed on Location in Chicago, IL
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Lifting as They Climbed
Watermelon Aloe Bitters Buttermilk Ice Cream
Tomorrow is the centennial of the 19th amendment— the day that made it official in law for women to vote in America; that is, white women. If you are familiar with my past work, you know that I spent a year researching the history of the women’s suffrage movement at Goucher College and in Baltimore, but while I was telling the story of white college students and Baltimore women who, although incredible and much more admirable then textbook favorite Susan B. Anthony (looking at you, Johns Hopkins Medical School, to finally give Mary Elizabeth Garret the honor she deserves for single-handedly funding your creation), I did not get to discuss in detail the staggering and selfless work that black American women (and men—hello Fredrick Douglas) did for the movement, who neither received recognition for their efforts or recognition of their win.
You might remember that in 1848 in Seneca Falls, NY, there was a convention of women, demanding equal rights. Black women were not present, but they still have speeches on the matter just as Elizabeth Cady Stanton did, they just did it where they were allowed and unbothered, in black churches. One such woman was Hallie Quinn Brown. Women like Brown, who were not in Jim Crow states, joined women’s clubs and organizations focused on human rights, which included women’s rights, education, prison reform, rights of working people, and temperance. In 1894, black women banned together and created the National Association of Colored Women, of which Brown would become president in 1920. Mary Church Terrell, one of the first African American women to earn a college degree, was the organization’s first president. The NACW was built on the strength of women like Sorjourner Truth and Harriet Tubman, who realized they were fighting two battles, one for their sex and one for their race. Women like Susan B. Anthony were vehemently against black male suffrage as they believed they deserved the vote more and first. In contrast, the NACW’s motto, which was sewn onto purple flags that resembled their white counterparts’ flag, was Lifting as We Climb.” Black suffrage leaders sought to lift up everyone, black men, white women, as they secured their rights.
Sixty-five years after the Seneca Falls convention, the white women of the National Women’s Party still did not to band together with black suffrage leaders. At the 1913 suffrage parade in Washington, D.C., which took place the day before President Wilson’s inauguration (ring a bell to anyone?), the leaders, which included Alice Paul, told the black women that they had to march at the back of the procession. Ida B. Wells simply refused, working her way into the delegation of white Illinois suffragists, and it was believed at this time that if white women had their way, black women would not be included in the amendment. And this basically happened. The 19th amendment served middle class white women, but most blacks women would wait almost half a century until they could exercise the same right, even though the work that black women put into the movement propelled its success.
After the passing of the 19th amendment, black suffrage leaders continued to fight for their rights. In 1922 there was a bill introduced in the U.S. congress to allow the creation of a “Monument to the Faithful Colored Mammies of the South.” Brown worked on a campaign to kill it, not wanting the incorrect and inglorious illustration of black women to be perpetuated further. Terrell worked on the desegregation of restaurants in D.C., and Wells continued to write investigative journalism and stayed active in politics.
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Terrell Hopkins, 1987 #GeorgeDureau
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COVID-19 AZOTA LA NFL
Los Ángeles.-El receptor abierto de los Rams de Los Ángeles, Odell Beckham Jr, ingresó a la lista de Covid-19 este martes, un día en que la NFL reportó 28 pruebas positivas más entre jugadores
Así, el brote de los últimos dos días es el peor en la Liga desde que sobrevino la pandemia.
El pasado lunes hubo 37 jugadores positivos. Los Chiefs de Kansas City colocaron a un jugador clave en los protocolos de salubridad en cada jornada, a dos días de disputar un encuentro crucial de la División Oeste de la Liga Americana, ante los Chargers de Los Ángeles.
Beckham fue uno de nueve jugadores de los Rams que ingresaron a la lista de Covid-19 el martes, con lo que la lista de jugadores del equipo inhabilitados por este motivo subió a 13.
Cleveland está lidiando con su segundo brote de consideración en la temporada. El receptor abierto Jarvis Landry estaba entre los ocho jugadores agregados a la lista, con lo que el total llegó a 11. Cleveland recibirá el sábado a los Raiders de Las Vegas.
"Haremos el trabajo. Es lo que hacemos. Lo hemos hecho antes'', dijo el entrenador en jefe de los Browns Kevin Stefanski.
Los safeties de los Rams, Jordan Fuller, Terrell Burgess y Juju Hughes ingresaron a la lista con el ala cerrada Brycen Hopkins y los tackles Alaric Jackson y Sebastian Joseph-Day. Sólo Beckham y Fuller han jugado de manera regular con Los Ángeles esta temporada.
El tackle defensivo de Kansas City, Chris Jones, elegido dos veces al Pro Bowl, ingresó a los protocolos un día después de que el receptor abierto Josh Gordon dio positivo. El entrenador en jefe, Andy Reid, no sabe si contará con alguno de los jugadores el jueves, cuando enfrenten a los Chargers.
El peor brote ocurre en momentos en que la Liga ha distribuido a los equipos un memo del que The Associated Press obtuvo una copia y en el que les da como fecha límite el 27 de diciembre para que entrenadores y personal del equipo reciban el refuerzo de la vacuna. De lo contrario, esas personas no se considerarán como completamente vacunadas bajo los criterios de la NFL.
La exigencia no se aplica para los jugadores debido a que continúan las discusiones con el sindicato.
El ala cerrada de Cleveland, Austin Hopper, los integrantes de la línea ofensiva Wyatt Teller y Jedrick Wills Jr., así como el ala defensiva Takk McKinley ingresaron a la lista con el guardia Drew Forbes, quien está lesionado.
Los Vikings pusieron al receptor y pateador Dede Westbrook en la lista de Covid-19. El lunes juegan en Chicago. Los Bears agregaron al tackle Eddie Goldman y al esquinero Artie Burns a los protocolos. El ala defensiva de Minnesota, Danielle Hunter, pasó de la lista de lesionados a la de Covid-19.
Washington agregó al esquinero Kendall Fuller y al tackle defensivo Tim Settle a la lista de coronavirus, pero activó al esquinero Darryl Roberts.
El corredor de Carolina Christian McCaffrey, quien está fuera toda la temporada por una lesión en el tobillo, se une a la lista de Covid-19, así como el liniero ofensivo de Baltimore, Trystan Colon. El receptor abierto de Tennessee Dez Fitzpatrick también se unió a la lista. (Agencia Reforma)
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